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Technical Paper

A Generic Modeling Approach for Automotive Power Net Consumers

2012-04-16
2012-01-0924
The integration of safety-critical and major power-consuming electrical systems presents a challenge for the development of future automotive electrical networks. Both reliability and performance must be enhanced in order to guarantee the power supply to essential electrical consumers at a sufficient degree of power quality. Often, in order to cope with these requirements, merely an upgrade of the existing wiring harness design is used, resulting in additional complexity, weight, and cost [3]. A characterization of the wiring harness and its electrical consumers facilitates a systematic optimization approach aimed at designing new automotive power networks [1, 5]. Measurement and analysis methods to characterise the thermal behaviour of the wiring harness have been presented and discussed in a previous paper [4] This paper presents and compares two methods aimed at modeling the electrical behavior of consumers at various voltages and temperatures.
Journal Article

A Statistical Analysis of Electrical Power Requirements in Vehicles

2015-04-14
2015-01-0243
The increasing power and safety requirements of electrical systems present a challenge for future automotive electrical networks. However, the modeling of use-profiles and the overall power consumption of electrical systems proves to be difficult as the number of potential on/off combinations of the loads is tremendous. Furthermore, the operation of some loads is correlated or depends upon the operating conditions. Thus, simple worst-case calculations applied to this complexity often lead to an over-specification of components. The proposed approach is based on the probabilities of loads being in the on-state and their respective interdependencies with each other and with boundary conditions such as time of day. Applying basic statistics and a new iterative algorithm, it allows the calculation of the probability of consumed total power for a given set of boundary conditions and of, very importantly, its expected continuous period.
Journal Article

A Statistical Analysis of the Thermal Behavior of Electrical Distribution Systems

2014-04-01
2014-01-0223
For the prevention of technical risks and the optimum design of an electrical distribution system, considerable efforts have been made to implement thermal models of wires, bundles, and electromechanical components in order to improve thermal analysis. Unfortunately, in most cases, important input parameters such as the position of a wire within a bundle or the profiles of the currents are unknown. This leads to the use of worst-case scenarios, frequently providing unrealistic results and uneconomic over-dimensioning. The proposed approach is based on the thermal simulation of a large number of randomly-generated bundle configurations for given profiles of currents. Thus one gets a temperature distribution, allowing a much more precise analysis compared to a simple worst-case calculation. By applying the same method to various current profiles, one gets temperature distributions for each wire as a function of a normalized total bundle current.
Journal Article

Model-Based Circuit Protection Using Solid State Switches

2017-03-28
2017-01-1641
Currently, circuit breakers and, in most cases, thermal fuses are used for wire protection due to their low cost and robust design. As an alternative, solid state switches are being considered within future electrical distribution systems (EDS) for several reasons, e.g. resetability, diagnosis, smaller tolerances, and reduced dependencies on ambient temperature or arcing. Particularely if combined with benefits on the system level, such an application can be advantageous. The new approach presented in this paper uses a thermal model of the wire instead of only an emulation of the thermal fuse behavior. This allows, based on the electrical current profile, the calculation of the wire temperature and thus a robust and precise protection of the wire. In addition, it minimizes the probability of faulty switching, which is of particular importance with regard to safety-critical electrical functions.
Technical Paper

Powertrain Control via Model Predictive Rollout Scheme

2024-04-09
2024-01-2141
Multi-motor powertrain topologies are playing an increasingly important role in the development of heavy duty battery electric trucks due to the changing driving requirements of these vehicles. The use of multiple motors and/or transmissions in a powertrain provides additional degrees of freedom for the energy management. The energy management system (EMS) consist of the gear selection strategy and torque split between the drive motors. The aim of the EMS is thereby to achieve high energy efficiency in motor and regenerative operation, while reducing the number of gear changes to ensure driving comfort. Ongoing research focuses on the energy management system of hybrid electric trucks, where the aim is to optimize the torque split between the combustion engine and the electric motor. In this paper, the EMS for an electric truck is described as a mixed-integer nonlinear control problem. This type of optimal control problem is notoriously difficult to solve.
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